Weekly Daf #215

Shabbos 114-120 - Issue #215
25 Adar-2 Nissan 5758 / 23-29 March 1998

Mystery of the Stranger on the Platform

"I never went against the wishes of my colleagues," Rabbi Yossi prided
himself. "Although I know that I am not a kohen, if they would ask me to go up
to the platform to offer the blessings of the kohanim I would go up."

Tosefos raises the question as to whether there is any halachic problem in a non-kohen
going up to the platform, and therefore finds it difficult to comprehend what was so
courageous about Rabbi Yossis action.

This position of Tosefos that there is nothing wrong with a non-kohen
participating in birkas kohanim is challenged by a wide range of commentaries from
a gemara (Kesuvos 24b) which clearly states that a non-kohen who
blesses the congregation is guilty of violating Torah law because the Torah gave this
mandate to kohanim only. A number of resolutions have been offered and we present a
sampling of them:

Rabbi Moshe Isserles (RaMa) suggests that the ban on a non-kohen giving a
blessing applies only when he does it by himself and not when he does so together with kohanim
(Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim 128:1).

Rabbi Yoel Sirkis (Bach - Bayis Chadash) writes that the ban applies only when the non-kohen
lifts his hands in the manner which kohanim do when saying the blessing.

Maharsha explains that Rabbi Yossi only went up to the platform but did not actually
say the blessing. Therefore, Tosefos, assuming that the Sage certainly did not say the
blessing which he is not permitted to say, finds nothing special in his mere ascent to the
platform.

A fourth approach, cited by Mishna Berura (128:3), has very practical halachic
implications. In order for one to fulfill a mitzvah he must have kavanah  a
positive intention to fulfill it. Since Rabbi Yossi as a non-kohen had no intention
of fulfilling a mitzvah for which he was not eligible, his action is not considered a
valid one and he was therefore not guilty of performing a mitzvah reserved for kohanim
only.

Mishna Berura (in the Biyur Halacha 128:3) raises the question about the
blessings which one Jew gives to another using the text of the birkas kohanim even
though the blesser is not himself a kohen. One resolution is based in the position
of the Bach (#2 above), that the ban is only when one raises his hands in the manner of
the kohanim. Another resolution is based on the fourth approach, which limits the
ban to a situation in which the blesser has the intention of doing the mitzvah reserved
for kohanim, not when he is simply wishing a friend or child well.

The only problem with this second resolution is that there is an opinion cited in Shulchan
Aruch Orach Chaim 60:4 that one can indeed fulfill a mitzvah even if his action was
not accompanied by direct intention. This problem too is solved by introducing the concept
that even if one is considered to have fulfilled a mitzvah without intention, he has not
fulfilled it if he had express intention not to fulfill it. Since the blessings of
the kohanim are done only during the prayer service, anyone saying them not in the
context of prayer is considered as expressly declaring that he does not wish to do the
mitzvah which is reserved for kohanim, and it is therefore permitted to do so.

Shabbos 118b

The Secret Ingredient

"Why does your Shabbos food have such a special fragrance?" the emperor asked
Rabbi Yehoshua ben Chanania.

"We put in a special ingredient," he replied, "and its called
Shabbos."

"Give me some of that ingredient," asked the emperor.

"It works for someone who observes Shabbos," explained the Sage, "but it
will have no effect for one who does not."

The climax of this famous dialogue is certainly appreciated by every Jew who finds a
special delight in his Shabbos meal which cannot be duplicated during the weekdays. But a
little analysis is required of the details of this exchange.

Why did the emperor, who assumed that Shabbos was the name of a spice, not ask the
obvious question: "Why dont the Jews use this spice in their recipes throughout
the week?"

This question did not bother the emperor, explains Iyun Yaakov, because he was
aware that Jews did special things in regard to clothes and food in honor of their holy
day of rest. He therefore suggested that since such a wonderful spice was set aside for
honoring Shabbos it should also be presented to him as an expression of honor for the
throne. Sensitive to his Jewish subjects respect for Shabbos he was even willing to
reserve use of this special spice to Shabbos alone, so that it would be used in honor of
both the holy day and the august emperor.

At this point Rabbi Yehoshua was compelled to explain that Shabbos was not a natural
spice but a supernatural ingredient which worked only for those who were commanded to
observe Shabbos. As the Zohar, quoted by Eitz Yosef, puts it, the very essence of
intangible Shabbos holiness takes on a tangible form in the special taste and fragrance of
Shabbos food.

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